Sliders and Buttons, Oh My

Nice Little ArrowHerewith, a few of the user interface widgets that I’ve been tinkering with lately for a Behavior project; only sliders/scroll bars and buttons here, but I’ve recently turned out four or five entire interface comps that wouldn’t look particularly conspicuous alongside most any Aqua-friendly Mac OS X application. Well, that’s my humble opinion, anyway, because I’m still getting comfortable with working in this aesthetic.

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Foxy Bird

Mozila FirefoxA new version of the resurgent Mozilla project’s Firebird browser was released yesterday under the new name “Firefox,” which seems to me to be an even dodgier moniker than Firebird, but I guess they had a good reason for the switch. I downloaded the Mac OS X version and played around with it a bit today, and it seems buggier than previous versions of Firebird that I’ve used; I had some trouble scrolling through a few Web pages, troubles that seemed caused by the application’s user interface, rather than the rendering engine.

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Time Intensive Button Design

ButtonI’m already on record with the contention that the high-touch, rendered and shaded school of aesthetics — as most prominently represented by Apple’s Aqua — is the inevitable future, probably, of user interface design. For a new Behavior project in which we’re building a series of interactive demonstration modules with Flash, we decided to take a crack at producing some really lush, ornate design comps as a possible visual solution. This is really my first concerted effort at this kind of Photoshop jockeying, so it’s entailed a good deal of extra time trying to learn the ins and outs of making dimensional widgets look convincing. It’s not all that difficult, but it’s not all that easy, either. I’ll tell you one thing, though: when I looked at the clock and saw that I’d spent almost six hours working on two buttons and a slider, I realized that this kind of work takes a long, long time.

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The Safari Ecosystem

Safari & OmniWeb 5Today was a good day to be a user of Apple’s much praised Safari. First, Apple released a new update to it, pushing the version number to 1.2 and, most significantly, adding full keyboard navigation, thereby allowing users to fully interact with Web pages without mousing (if they so desire). This is the latest in the very slow conversion of Apple’s philosophy on keyboard versus mouse access to user interfaces; the company is incrementally acquiescing to the generally accepted principle that, more often than not, using a keyboard is much faster, at least for advanced users.

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Beautiful Girls

RonyShram.comFor no good reason, I neglected to write about RonyShram.com, a site that Behavior launched about two weeks ago. It’s an online portfolio that we built for an old colleague that we knew in the dot-com boom, who went on, somewhat surprisingly, to build a career photographing beautiful women. (And all I got was this lousy LLC!) The site was authored in Flash, which is practically de rigeur for photographers’ sites, but the back-end uses some clever PHP to make administration dead easy; all that’s required to reorder, replace or remove photos is simply moving JPEGs in and out of directory folders.

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Reading the Unsteady State

Unsteady StateThere’s still no way to get online access to archives of The New Yorker’s rich bounty of essays, articles, reviews and humor — not even if you’re a subscriber, nor even if you want to pay for it — so you’d better hurry over there and read Hendrik Hertzberg’s contribution to this week’s Talk of the Town section before it’s no longer available. The piece is called “Unsteady State,” and it nicely wraps up President Bush’s troubled first few weeks of 2004, bookended by his weak and disingenuous attempt at re-igniting the space race and the partisan polticking of his State of the Union speech.

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Shake ’n’ Bake

New Hampshire PrimaryThe good news is that there’s less than a year to go in the disastrous, one-term presidency of George W. Bush. Next 20 Jan a new president will be sworn in, a Democrat, and we’ll finally put an end to the far right’s ideological foreign policy and avaricious economic roadmap.

Granted, here after the New Hampshire primary, I have very little idea of who that Democrat’s going to be, except to say that it won’t be Joseph Lieberman or Wes Clark — the former is dogged but pathetic, and the latter has proven to be too ill-prepared a candidate to last the long haul.

It just goes to show that I know jack shit about politics, because I am perplexed by the underwhelming nature of John Kerry’s momentum — in spite of his convincing win this evening, there’s still a fragile quality to his candidacy, as if that stony face would crumble under just a few degrees more of intense scrutiny.

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